Title of article :
Towards Multiparametric Fluorescent Imaging of Amyloid Formation: Studies of a YFP Model of α-Synuclein Aggregation
Author/Authors :
Tjakko J. van Ham، نويسنده , , Alessandro Esposito، نويسنده , , Janet R. Kumita، نويسنده , , Shang-Te D. Hsu، نويسنده , , Gabriele S. Kaminski Schierle، نويسنده , , Clemens F. Kaminski، نويسنده , , Christopher M. Dobson، نويسنده , , Ellen A.A. Nollen، نويسنده , , Carlos W. Bertoncini، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
16
From page :
627
To page :
642
Abstract :
Misfolding and aggregation of proteins are characteristics of a range of increasingly prevalent neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimerʹs and Parkinsonʹs diseases. In Parkinsonʹs disease and several closely related syndromes, the protein α-synuclein (AS) aggregates and forms amyloid-like deposits in specific regions of the brain. Fluorescence microscopy using fluorescent proteins, for instance the yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), is the method of choice to image molecular events such as protein aggregation in living organisms. The presence of a bulky fluorescent protein tag, however, may potentially affect significantly the properties of the protein of interest; for AS in particular, its relative small size and, as an intrinsically unfolded protein, its lack of defined secondary structure could challenge the usefulness of fluorescent-protein-based derivatives. Here, we subject a YFP fusion of AS to exhaustive studies in vitro designed to determine its potential as a means of probing amyloid formation in vivo. By employing a combination of biophysical and biochemical studies, we demonstrate that the conjugation of YFP does not significantly perturb the structure of AS in solution and find that the AS-YFP protein forms amyloid deposits in vitro that are essentially identical with those observed for wild-type AS, except that they are fluorescent. Of the several fluorescent properties of the YFP chimera that were assayed, we find that fluorescence anisotropy is a particularly useful parameter to follow the aggregation of AS-YFP, because of energy migration Förster resonance energy transfer (emFRET or homoFRET) between closely positioned YFP moieties occurring as a result of the high density of the fluorophore within the amyloid species. Fluorescence anisotropy imaging microscopy further demonstrates the ability of homoFRET to distinguish between soluble, pre-fibrillar aggregates and amyloid fibrils of AS-YFP. Our results validate the use of fluorescent protein chimeras of AS as representative models for studying protein aggregation and offer new opportunities for the investigation of amyloid aggregation in vivo using YFP-tagged proteins.
Keywords :
protein aggregation , fluorescence anisotropy imaging microscopy , fluorescence protein , Parkinsonיs disease , protein misfolding
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1250997
Link To Document :
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